Not My Problem (1)

for all have sinned and fall short of the glory of God Romans 3:23 NASB

Fall short – Just how far do you think you’ll get with modern men and women by telling them that they are sinners? Can I suggest that unless you are speaking to people who have some sort of connection with the Church or the Bible, your words will fall on deaf ears? Sin is not modern man’s problem. Modern man’s problem is summed up by Nietzsche. “Woe unto him who has no home!” Modern man’s problem is that he is homeless in the universe. Since the Enlightenment, he has discovered with intensifying clarity that he doesn’t fit in. Pascal, who offered the famous wager of faith, actually contributed to the modern angst when he suggested that Man is thrown into “the overawing infinity of cosmic spaces and times,”[1] and recognizes his total insignificance in an indifferent universe. Man’s problem is silence! The universe no longer speaks to him. He is utterly alone in “an immense and blind universe in which his existence is but a particular blind accident.”[2] With the collapse of the Greek idea of cosmos[3] and the loss of the Hebrew idea of a Creator,

he shares no longer in a meaning of nature, but merely, through his body, in its mechanical determination, so nature no longer shares in his inner concerns. Thus that by which man is superior to all nature, his unique distinction, mind, no longer results in a higher integration of his being into the totality of being, but on the contrary marks the unbridgeable gulf between himself and the rest of existence. Estranged from the community of being in one whole, his consciousness only makes him a foreigner in the world . . .[4]

This is the human condition. Gone is the cosmos with whose immanent logos my own can feel kinship, gone the order of the whole in which man has his place. That place appears now as a sheer and brute accident . . . a universe without an intrinsic hierarchy of being, as the Copernican universe is, leaves values ontologically unsupported, and the self is thrown back entirely upon itself in its quest for meaning and value. Meaning is no longer found but is “conferred.”[5]

In other words, you and I make our own world because we are completely cast adrift from any meaningful world outside of us. Anarchy in the heavens means death to the human spirit, but rather than commit suicide, we award ourselves the right to determine what matters. If we summarize this academic analysis, we discover something incredibly important. Modern man does not stand on Mars Hill. He has painted himself back into the Garden. Once more he is challenged to either acknowledge that the creation is God’s or he is tempted to create his own. Modern man has opted for the latter. The result is expulsion—not just from the Garden but from all creation.

The religious community has a tendency to read only the first part of Paul’s statement. “All have sinned,” is all we need when the world is fundamentally religious. But the world isn’t religious anymore. At least it isn’t religious for men who occupy the space derived from 18th Century Western thought. Maybe we’ve forgotten what has happened to men who are lost in the world. We still think they need to repent. But the world has changed, and so has the emphasis in Paul’s statement. Sin isn’t the issue. Glory is.

Modern man has been stripped of glory. It’s not that he has simply fallen short. Modern man has been emasculated, castrated from the universe that used to provide him with some sense of purpose and meaning. Modern man has no significance. What he does doesn’t matter. It’s all swept away by cosmic determinism, the inexorable grinding of natural laws and random chance. Modern man is not worried about being judged for his sin. He is worried about living for no reason at all.

Heschel noted that religion must begin with awe. Paul says pretty much the same thing (Romans 1:19-20). Unless the universe inspires, healing is not possible. Maybe we haven’t understood how important glory is to the equation. Perhaps we should adjust Paul’s verse: “All modern men have fallen short of God’s glory, and sinned.”

Topical Index: fallen short, glory, cosmos, universe, sin, Romans 3:23

[1] Hans Jonas, The Gnostic Religion, p. 322.

[2] Ibid.

[3] You will recall that cosmos means much more than “universe.” “By a long tradition this term had to the Greek mind become invested with the highest religious dignity. The very word by its literal meaning expresses a positive evaluation of the object—any object—to which it is accorded as a descriptive term. For cosmos means ‘order’ in general, whether of the world or a household, of a commonwealth of a life: it is a term of praise and even admiration. Thus when applied to the universe and becoming assigned to it as to its eminent instance, the word does not merely signify the neutral but expresses a specific and to the Greek mind an ennobling quality of this whole: that it is order.” Hans Jonas, The Gnostic Religion, p. 241.

[4] Jonas, op. cit., p. 323.

[5] Ibid.

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Laurita Hayes

” Unless the universe inspires, healing is not possible.” Inspired words! We are suffering from profound disconnect with reality. The sinner recognizes this by means of measuring himself with the Law. The lawless have to recognize this by means of measuring themselves with the physical consequences of that sin, which is their essential fracture with reality.

I have been having to learn a different language for the godless. The language of the Bible only works for those who are already singing in the choir. This is the challenge of modernity: how do we reach out to the lost when the revival methods of yesteryear are no longer effectual? “They have made void Thy law” the Psalmist mourned. Modern religion is to blame for deep-sixing the Law; this is merely the fruit. The sin of the world’s impenitance can always be laid at the door of the church. It is up to us to figure out how to take responsibility for this travesty. Now we have to reach out even further.

I am challenged this morning with answering a precious person who believes all law is illusion. This one walked out of a dead church and is now in the ranks of the godless. This is a much harder reach, I have decided, then those who never were in a church. My challenge is to present law again in terms of reality, without the overtones of religion. I am tempted to use the method Francis Schaeffer used on one of his young folks who was suffering from a Budhhist mentality. I think I might have to pick up a stick and tell this person to imagine the stick is a feather and then swack him a good one. Please pray for us!

There are studies that confirm the maximum ideal size of a community is only a few hundred people; more than that and people start to dehumanize each other and lose a sense of purpose, too. We were created to interact in tribes and interact directly with nature, too. This is why God commanded that people disperse widely after the Flood: we tend to build Towers of Confusion if we ever reach critical mass. This entire planet seems hellbent on reaching a mass those folks only dreamed of by means of mass media and mass religion and other social systems, but each move toward this mirage of connection only fractures us further from our true connection with ourselves, God, each other and the cosmos, too.

A return to purpose necessitates the healing of our fracture on all levels. I believe the only way the world is going to be able to see the truth now is to demonstrate the original connection we were assigned in the Garden. We are going to have to start completely over to speak to this profound suffering at this level of illness. I believe we are in the final throes of sickness that originates from our fracture with nature, nature’s God, and our place in that original cosmos, and our substitutes don’t seem to be working that well.

Back to the beginning again. Again.

Seeker

Laurita no challenge will come your way for which you have not been prepared. The law chastises into Christ. No one can experience God’s calling without learning the basic two rules. Love God then love all like yourself.

It is not easy and is very frustrating with many turmoils. Look at nature and how it responds to restore. Ignoring the logic by applying the illogic. Hurricanes, earthquakes, volcanoes, floods, droughts etc all restore the natural harmony and draw people closer.

That is the law of how this creation should operate.

What is the law of the creator…
Different from the creation…
No, revealed through the creation.

When this first law is understood, Yeshua revealed that what is sowed does not return. It dies and a new reality is born and introduced. Do not seek what is obvious to be revealed when you interact or share with others. Look and witness the illogical changes being manifested then you know the seed sown has been planted.

We cannot change others God will when the time is needed. We can just help others become uncomfortable with what they know and do… Then we can keep sharing wisdom or water and when God needs the miracle of love changes what must change and the result he needs is manifested.

Do what you can to help those you deem lost to ask the right question. What can they do to be saved. Now remember God is in control.

Some may say this is Greek and gnostic. But you be the judge. Let God bring about what he desires. Us, we just keep reminding and pointing in the direction we trust is right our knowledge and interpretations. Never claiming we have the answer but always willing to measure all against the laws provided by Moses.

As explained by the prophets then manifested first by Yeshua then by the apostles. The only two spirits I understand that were sent to save; clarification and application. We choose what we want clarified God provides the teacher. We want to know how to apply God provides the demonstrator. He does not give a direct answer for his answer is the results the changed life brings about.

David Nelson

Skip, I get some great new insight from your writing every time I read it. I get so excited about each new thing. However, I often get frustrated and even depressed as well because there is so much stuff from my ” Church” past that I am having to unlearn or look at in ways that are so foreign to what I was taught. But I am determined to press on because your teaching really resonates with me. Thanks to you and all in the community who share their insights and their journey. Blessings and shalom to all.

Baruch Ruby

David You are not alone, I heard ” when Father is doing a work in us sometimes it happens in a instant like a flood, and sometimes drip by drip” from glory to glory yes our lives are a journey. your words David are an encouragement to me. I often must needs to forget those things which are behind and press on! Walk with the King David and Be a blessing today, because YOU are, Shalom back at ya

Rich Pease

HEARING
Telling a person in today’s age that they are a sinner is like telling
them they have bad breath. It won’t get you to become fast friends.
But tell that same person that you find his/her soulful countenance
attractive, then you have gained some egocentric attention.
Each person needs to think they are of consequence, useful — maybe
even vital. And that thought is best brought to their attention by another person.
Affirmation. Being needed. Being lovingly reminded that it’s no secret we were
all lovingly created to receive love, and if there is a secret, it’s to learn how to give
our love away. If you can breathe, you’ve got a leg up.
This truth needs to be uncloaked as we know it is richly entrenched within every living soul.
People just have to be reminded. Someone has to tell them. And doesn’t faith, too, come by hearing?
It’s all one on one. Personal. Relational.
It’s how God got to you. And me. It’s how He works! Listen . . .

Seeker

Nicely explained thank you Rich.

Michael C

“For God so loved the cosmos . . .” That is, YHVH focused his chesed on “. . . the whole of creation (that) groans and suffers the pains of childbirth together until now.” Romans 8:22

Yeshua’s death not only killed and eliminated the one barrier for us to enjoy life forever but also enabled “that the creation itself will be set free from its bondage to decay and brought into the glorious freedom of the children of God.” Romans 8:21

When one expands his/her view to realize the scope of YHVH’s chesed, that is, everything, a better glimpse comes in to view of the grand scale of community we have been invited in to. YHVH created and it was good. The cosmos becomes that voice exclaiming YHVH’s glory from the heavens of which we have been invited in to and made welcome, with fear and trembling. We now have a home exuding awe and glory.

It seems our views have been so very myopic focusing only on us. The canvas of YHVH is infinitely larger. The cosmos has been, is, and will be the heart of YHVH’s chesed, energy and impetus. An E-ticket will not come close to revealing its glory.

Amazing.

pam wingo

Man wants to think he can create a utopia outside of God and the laws he has set forth. though utopia really sounds good ,it still puts man at the center to control it and man’s law reigns. How well is that working for us? In the process of man determining what’s Good and evil, good has become evil and evil has become good. Most unbelievers we deal with say” I am a good person” I follow the law meaning man’s law. That’s their standard of goodness why because it’s easy ,not much requirement and involves no dying to self ,no love and no commitment to anything or anybody other than themselves. Easy peasy right ummm.They feel no need of redemption or Yeshua and all he did,after all their good people!

Daniel Kraemer

I think this is great insight by Skip but let me drive home a little more of what the Greek definition of “cosmos” was. It had little, if anything, to do with the word “universe” as we use it today. The Jonas citation above concerning “cosmos” initially misleads us this way. He says it meant, “. . . much more than the universe”, but anciently, “universe” never was its primary definition.

Its principal meaning was, as Jonas further explained, – an order of people, of a household, or, commonwealth, and the ennobling quality of them. (And may I add, intricately ordered jewelry and hair, COSmetics, adornment, see 1Peter 3:3).

Anciently, it usually referred to an ordered law keeping society. (The 5 planets and Zodiac were way down on the Greek definition list of cosmos.)

John did not mean to say, Jesus loved the whole solar system. He meant to convey that Jesus loved the ordered societies, (even if they didn’t keep all the laws all the time.) In contrast, He did not love the sinful man who devolved himself from God’s laws of order to become part of an anarchy ruled by the “god of this cosmos” whose non-laws lead not to life but to death.

My point being that John 3:16 has two halves. God so loved the cosmos (world), but His love is not unconditional. A cosmos is not a cosmos unless it is found to be a law keeping society. Only then will, “everyone who is believing in him not perish . . . “